“…It also illustrates how, as a result, activities are often focused on challenging and changing practices rather than changing policy: that is, change within the boundaries set by the state, even activities that are camouflaging wider changes to the institutional context (Crotty and Ljubownikow, 2020;Pape and Skokova, 2022). As such, it aligns with the first two papers and the extent to which literature in both Russian and other similar contexts illustrates how in hostile and repressive contexts civil society actors focus/are forced to focus on social or welfare activities (or similar activities that do not elicit a negative elite response), rather than those that directly engage in activities challenging institutional arrangements (Kulmala, 2016;Dai and Spires, 2018;Claus and Tracey, 2020;Crotty and Ljubownikow, 2020;Ljubownikow and Crotty, 2023;Pape and Skokova, 2022;Neuberger et al, 2023). In shining a light on how subject understandings inform actions, the paper illustrates the use of perception/portrayal of competence to make claims against the state and change local practices (Zeng et al, 2019;Crotty and Ljubownikow, 2020).…”